A sample of 45 patients with a history of coronary heart disease and documented myocardial ischemia during exercise testing were evaluated in an investigation of the possible relationships between psychological factors (depression and Type A behavior pattern), plasma beta-endorphin response and pain experience during maximal exercise-induced ischemia. Depression was assessed using the MMPI-D subscale, while Type A was evaluated using the Structured Interview. All patients developed ischemia during exercise as defined by ST-segment depression; however, only 18 patients reported anginal pain. Patients with high depression scores (MMPI-D greater than or equal to 70; n = 13) showed lesser increases in plasma beta-endorphin levels, tended more often to report anginal pain and rated pain as more severe during exercise than patients with low depression scores (MMPI-D less than 60; n = 18). Hemodynamic responses and severity of ischemia (assessed by ejection fraction changes and wall-motion abnormalities) did not differ between depression groups. Even after adjustment for group differences in exercise duration, depression was significantly associated with a lesser beta-endorphin response in the sample as a whole and, among patients reporting angina, with earlier pain onset and greater pain duration and severity. In contrast, when Type A versus B/X subgroups were compared, no differences in pain experience, beta-endorphin response or measures of ischemia were obtained. These findings suggest that in patients with ischemic heart disease, there may be a relationship between depression and anginal pain which may in part involve a blunted or absent beta-endorphin response.

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